Microbial Systems and Computational Biology

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The Microbial Systems and Computational Biology group aims to understand the distributions of functions that natural microbial communities exhibit at different scales.

To understand the distributions of functions that natural microbial communities exhibit at different scales we employ wetlab, DNA sequencing, and computational tools. By using Omics data and integrating with multiple other high throughput technologies we are investigating the role played by microorganisms in the environment we live in. Acting en masse those microbes are responsible for large scale biogeochemical processes as well as being important for human health and disease in individuals. We use large-scale genomics experiments to characterize those microbial communities and their metabolism. In addition we are interested in characterizing the various functions of these microbial communities and the mechanisms that govern their capabilities and ​“behavior”. To study these microbial systems we implement state of the art tools including next generation DNA sequencing and computational approaches.

Folker Meyer is a computational biologist at Argonne National Laboratory and a senior fellow at the Computation Institute at the University of Chicago. He is also the associate division director of the Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology at Argonne National Laboratory.